Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'll refresh the memory of committee members because you moved this motion some time ago. In the fall of 2013 this committee, identically with committees throughout the House of Commons, moved a motion that required any member of Parliament in one of the smaller parties, either the Green Party or Bloc or Independent members, to give 48 hours' notice to produce amendments. I wish I had had more time to take into account some recent suggestions that were sent to me through the National Farmers Union, but we operate with the instructions that we have to get them here 48 hours ahead of time. As you will recall, Mr. Chair, the amendments that I, as a person not a member of this committee, will present today are deemed moved through some sort of mystical process, and I get to speak to them.
Quickly speaking to this, the Green Party is very concerned. We know the farming and the agricultural community in Canada is more or less split over Bill C-18, whether we've sufficiently protected farmers' privilege and whether we've got the balance right. In general, I want to stress one point that I think is pretty critical, and it was in the testimony that you heard from the National Farmers Union. Even though UPOV is recognized by the World Trade Organization and it does govern this area, every revamping of UPOV has the effect of ratcheting up corporate control over seeds and is a real concern to farmers but we as a country do have the right under all the UPOVs to maintain our own legitimate protection of plant breeders. That's why we are seeking in my amendments to help buttress the farmers' privilege. I welcome the government amendment that was just passed.
Also, for my colleagues across the way who before we began informally mentioned that they didn't know that Vancouver Island had a lot of agriculture. We have a lot of agriculture. In my riding we have hundreds of farms and farmers and producers of all kinds. We have over 20,000 farms in British Columbia. Contributing to this when you add processing to the total economic impact we have over a $40 billion of economic impact. That leaves out the product that my friends were assuming was B.C.'s biggest green product. I don't know anything about that.
Moving on to my amendment which, in this case, is to add another clause to clause 5. I'm proposing that at line 22, on page 7, we add a general direction for interpretation of all the preceding clauses within clause 5. As you'll see before you, and for theParti Vert -1 the suggestion is that:
Sections 5 to 5.4 are to be interpreted and applied in a manner that does not impose unreasonable financial burden on farmers or impede their rights to grow, save and use seed for planting, including their unrestricted rights to clean, store and prepare seeds for that purpose.
Again, Mr. Chair, I think it's pretty straightforward. I welcome any comments from the officials who are here today. This is a guide to interpretation to ensure that we don't accidentally, unintentionally, create new financial burdens on farmers or impede the rights to clean, store, and prepare seed and to grow, save, and use that seed in ways that the current Bill C-18 suggests it does not intend to have those impacts. This is to clarify for purposes of interpretation.
Thank you very much.